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Martin-Jenkins was appointed BBC cricket correspondent in 1973, left the corporation to become editor of The Cricketer in 1980, but returned in 1985, until he joined the Daily Telegraph as their cricket correspondent in 1990.
BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew also wrote on Twitter: "Just another ball in just another game.
Jonathan Agnew, the BBC cricket correspondent, described the tour as "a shambles in every way".
The BBC cricket correspondent Agnew has voiced his disappointment at what he senses was an opportunity missed to improve players' behaviour during Australia's home Test series against India.
Just ask Jonathan Agnew, the BBC cricket correspondent who courted controversy last week by insinuating Australia had sullied the memory of Phillip Hughes, their late team-mate, by continuing their aggressive approach during the fractious Test series against India.
Chris Rogers has defended Australia's on-field conduct after Jonathan Agnew, the BBC cricket correspondent, accused them of dishonouring the memory of their fallen team-mate, Phillip Hughes, with continued sledging during the recent Test series with India.
Newsreader Corrie Corfield paid tribute to a "great friend and best boss ever", calling Donaldson "wonderful, generous, kind, charming", while BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew celebrated their mutual love of cricket.
The "stump cam" has long been a staple of TV cricket coverage, but the "helmet cam" gave a uniquely first-person insight into BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew's attempts at horseriding.
The BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew has drawn what was possibly the intended level of attention to himself and his thesis on sledging by dragging Australian captain Michael Clarke and the memory of Hughes into the debate.
Chief among them is Jonathan Agnew, the BBC cricket correspondent, whose well-intentioned but clumsy attempts to link the death of Phillip Hughes with on-field behaviour sparked the sport's latest bout of navel gazing.
The first, an audiovisual one of a baby laughing (for those averse to children, his laugh has an eerily adult timbre), and the second, a purely audio one of BBC cricket commentators Brian Johnston and Jonathan Agnew getting the giggles about Ian Botham failing to get his leg over... the wicket.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com